So I have this debian server running. I'm running rkhunter every 5 mins from cron and recently it started finding a few hidden ports every now and then. From what I understand, a hidden port could just be one that is in wait_close state. So is this something to worry about?

I installed the deb, and started the program under the current username, connected to it within the browser but if I wish to select the folder /media/myusbexternal_hardisk or /mnt/something it is telling me that I do not have write permissions

Raspbian is a distribution <based on Debian> made specifically for the <Raspberry Pi>. Raspbian is not Debian and it is not supported in #debian. Please use #raspbian on irc.freenode.net for support. http://www.raspbian.org/

phos, petn-randall problem solved. I have write acces now. I guess it was related to mounting the stick to /media/*something instead of /mnt. I with help of a guy from raspian irc chan I formated the usb stick to EXT4 filesystem, then added the mounting line in /mnt/128kingston (by label with nofail option), then chmod 777 on and now resilio sync can write into that folder.

Hey, guys! How are you? I'd like to know where I can find a tutorial, blog or anything similar which could give me instructions on how to compile and install squid-4.5 over Debian 9.6 (with all dependencies and options). Looking in the Squid's official website, I didn't find it, except the basic compilation process.

When you get random packages from random repositories, mix multiple releases of Debian, or mix Debian and derived distributions, you have a mess. There's no way anyone can support this "distribution of Frankenstein" and #debian certainly doesn't want to even try. Ask me about <reinstall>

Shiny New Shit Syndrome is a serious disorder, which usually breaks out into an epidemic every time something new is released. If you have SNS, ask me about <backports> and <ssb>; these are better options than upgrading to <testing> because it is a <moving target>.

sdk: what kind of searching are you wanting? something that can be parsed, or are you just wanting some way to look up packages and versions? if the latter, you could access https://packages.debian.org from a text browser like 'links'.